Across much of the developing world, the most marginalised are also those most likely to depend on animals for their survival. As much of Africa once more faces drought and extremes of climate, it is pastoralist communities who are again most threatened.
In many of the areas where SPANA works, it has long been recognised that the mass death of animals is often a precursor to humanitarian tragedy. By protecting working animals and livestock we ensure stronger, more secure communities.
The impact of the Covid-19 pandemic has had devastating consequences for working animals in developing countries around the world. Lockdowns and restrictions on movement have left many people with no work or income, and owners have been struggling to feed or care for their animals. Malnutrition and dehydration have threatened the survival of countless animals in the world’s poorest communities.
In response to this crisis, SPANA has been undertaking a series of emergency projects in some of the hardest hit locations, providing lifesaving feed, water, shelter and emergency veterinary care to animals in desperate need.
Our projects include emergency feeding programmes in Ethiopia, Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Tanzania and Tunisia, which distributed more than 267,000kg of feed in 2020.
After a series of failed rains over consecutive years, millions of animals in Turkana, north-west Kenya, were close to starvation.
The nomadic tribespeople of the region are pastoralists, relying totally on large herds of cattle, donkeys and camels to survive against the odds in this expansive desert environment.
SPANA has been working in Turkana for over a decade, supporting local organisations and improving water access for those animals at greatest risk.
In 2018, SPANA funded the construction of a 110-metre-deep solar-powered borehole, to get help to animals now and for many years to come. The borehole became operational in September, with two animal troughs and a water kiosk supplying 4,200 people and 15,076 donkeys, camels and livestock from four nearby villages.
With clean water now flowing freely, animals and people no longer need to travel long distances to collect dirty water. The community reports that animal health has improved, with fewer miles covered in search of water, better control of disease and a reduction in the number of animal thefts.
Following the most severe drought in Ethiopia in over 50 years, last year SPANA undertook an emergency feeding programme in Afar, one of the worst hit regions. Local people in Afar are mostly pastoralists who rely entirely on livestock for their livestock and for produce such as milk.
In total, SPANA fed 7,837 livestock and working animals belonging to the poorest families over a four month period, distributing more than 150 tonnes of feed.
SPANA also put in place longer term measures to assist people and their animals in the region long after the end of the drought. The charity planted 10 hectares of drought-resistant grasses to provide an ongoing, local food supply for livestock.
During the emergency, SPANA highlighted the lack of attention being given by the international community to tackling livestock deaths. Many of the most vulnerable people in Ethiopia depend on livestock for both economic and food security. SPANA warned that the failure to learn from the mistakes of the past and to take action to protect existing herds could lead to a complete collapse in livestock numbers, preempting a devastating humanitarian crisis across the country.
In 2014, the collapse in Egyptian tourism following years of political unrest had a devastating impact on animals working in the tourism industry, close to the Giza Pyramids. During the year SPANA worked with Egyptian charity ESAF, providing emergency feed to hundreds of malnourished carriage horses.
In Mauritania, SPANA worked to save the lives of animals caught up in civil war and drought as tens of thousands of pastoralists crossed the Mali border to a large refugee camp in Mbera. SPANA was the only organisation providing support to the animals in the camps, vital for the long term survival of people, communities and animals.
SPANA funded feeding programmes in the far north east of Kenya, just a few miles from both the Somali and Ethiopian borders. It was the very epicentre of the crisis, with poor and dispossessed refugees arriving every day. Many were nomadic pastoralists: people who depend totally on livestock and working animals for transport, trade, milk – everything. When they lost their animals, they had no choice but to try and reach a refugee camp. With their animals gone, these people had no way to sustain themselves and became trapped in the camps, reliant on food aid. SPANA worked to prevent that. By providing fodder, veterinary help and vaccinations to working animals and livestock in terrible need. We helped families retain their independent livelihood and secured the long-term future for animals across the region.
Our former Chief Executive Jeremy writes about his trip to Ethiopia to see our emergency feeding programme in action.
Read about our emergency project building and repairing wells to help animals suffering a devastating drought known as the 'dzud'.
Read about our emergency project building and repairing wells to help animals suffering a devastating drought known as the 'dzud'.
Our former Chief Executive Jeremy writes about his trip to Ethiopia to see our emergency feeding programme in action.
Read about our emergency project building and repairing wells to help animals suffering a devastating drought known as the 'dzud'.
Read about our emergency project building and repairing wells to help animals suffering a devastating drought known as the 'dzud'.